
Our friends in India: US explains why it allowed Delhi to buy Russian oil
India Today
US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said Washington is allowing India to refine stranded Russian oil at sea as a short-term measure to stabilize global supply and ease price pressure amid West Asia tensions.
The United States has said it is "allowing our friends in India" to refine Russian oil already stranded at sea around southern Asia in a short-term effort to stabilise global energy supplies amid tensions in West Asia.
“We have implemented short-term measures to help keep oil prices down. We are allowing our friends in India to take oil that is already on ships, refine it, and move those barrels into the market quickly. A practical way to get supply flowing and ease pressure,” US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said.Speaking in an interview with ABC News Live, Wright said the move is a temporary step aimed at ensuring adequate supply in the global oil market at a time when shipping disruptions linked to the Strait of Hormuz are raising concerns.In an interview with ABC News Live, Wright said that long-term oil supplies are "abundant" and there are no worries regarding that, but in the short term, there is a need to get oil on the market.
We have implemented short term measures to help keep oil prices down.We are allowing our friends in India to take oil that is already on ships, refine it, and move those barrels into the market quickly. A practical way to get supply flowing and ease pressure. pic.twitter.com/Y0i5wpxkcb— Secretary Chris Wright (@SecretaryWright) March 6, 2026
Wright emphasised that global oil supplies remain strong in the long run, but the immediate challenge is ensuring that enough oil reaches the market. “Long-term oil supplies are abundant and we are not worried about that. But in the short term, we need to get oil onto the market,” he said.
Wright explained that several shipments of Russian oil have been sitting in floating storage around southern Asia after Chinese buyers slowed purchases.
"But as oil gets bid up a little bit because of those constraints coming out of the Strait of Hormuz, we're taking a short-term action to say all this floating Russian oil storage that's around southern Asia, it's China just backed up, China does not treat their suppliers well, so there's a bunch of floating barrels just sitting there.“There’s a bunch of floating barrels just sitting there. We’ve reached out to our friends in India and said, ‘Buy that oil. Bring it into your refineries,’” he said. That pulls stored oil immediately into Indian refineries and releases the pressure on other refineries around the world to buy oil that they're no longer competing with the Indians for in that marketplace," Wright said.

India on Monday said it has not held bilateral talks with the United States on deploying naval vessels to secure merchant shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. The clarification came after US President Donald Trump urged countries to send warships to keep the strategic waterway open amid tensions with Iran.












